Measurement Guide

1. Skin condition

There are 4 primary categories of skin condition: normal, dry, oily, and combination. However, your skin condition varies greatly during the course of your life. The many internal and external factors that determine skin condition include: climate and pollution, medication, stress and genetic factors that influence the levels of sebum and moisturizing factors that your skin produces as well as the products that you use and the skincare choices that you make. The Chowis Mobile Analyzer for Skin offers a convenient and efficient way for you to determine a customer's skin condition. The onboard corneometer uses capacitance sensors to accurately measure the hydration level for both T-zone and U-zone.

Figure 1

Figure 1. Corneometer capacitance sensor of the Chowis Mobile Analyzer for Skin

Absorbent sebum strips are provided for the diagnosis of skin sebum.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Skin sebum strips

Press the sebum strip moderately onto skin for 10 seconds, remove sebum strip and take an image with the PPL light mode of our analyzer. Repeat the process for both T-zone and U-zone. Our algorithms then evaluate both the hydration level and sebum level to provide the grading for skin condition.

2. Chowis skin condition grade

The following scale has been co-developed by Chowis and Dermatology experts. For moisture, we average the moisture scores of t-zone and u-zone to get the final hydration level. For skin sebum, our algorithm detects sebum spots in the captured images and compute the average as the sebum level.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Individual moisture and sebum scores for both t-zone and u-zone

Based on the scale shown in Table 1, we grade skin condition into normal, dry, oily and combination. To get accurate estimation of skin condition, make sure you measure moisture and sebum for both t-zone and u-zone.

Table 1. Chowis skin condition scale
Moisture scaleSebum scaleSkin condition
5050Normal
0 ~ 330 ~ 33Dry
0 ~ 9966 ~ 99Oily
0 ~ 9934 ~ 66Combination
Table 2. Representative skin conditions
NormalImage
DryImage
OilyImage
CombinationImage

3. Skin Age

The age of your skin is determined by a lot more than a date on the calendar. Many things, including genetics, your lifestyle, and environment play a role in how old your skin appears. The two dominating impetuses, among all of them, are the loss of collagen, elastin and hyaluronic acids, and the extent of sun exposure. Firstly, loss of connective tissues promotes the formation of wrinkles. Secondly, sun exposure accelerates the breakdown of connective tissues and causes uneven skin pigmentation such as spots and freckles. On this basis, we co-developed a skin age computation formula with dermatology experts considering wrinkles measurement results, spots measurement results, and real biological age.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Skin age

To get correct skin age estimation, it is essential to carry out both wrinkles and spots measurements. In case either measurement is skipped, or both measurements are not performed, we show the biological age as skin age.

4. Your Focus Area

We identify the top two skin measurements that you performed poorly. These two measurements represent areas of focus in skincare and product recommendations. To better identify your actual skin focus area, a full spectrum of skin analysis is recommended.

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Figure 5. Your Focus Area

5. Radar graph

To help you gain insights in your skin diagnosis, we visualize the results using radar graph. In the radar graph, the nearer a dot is located to the center, the better that skin attribute is.

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Figure 6. Radar graph for skin diagnosis results

Depending on how well you perform for each measurement, we provide advices on care focuses and recommend the right products just for you.

Table 3. Recommendation for care levels
Care levelDescription
NormalMaintain current care routine if any. No changes are required
Need to careNeed to begin to use products that focuses on the specified hair or scalp measure before it gets worse
Pay attention to careExtra attention and care is recommended
Intensive care neededIntensive care and/or proper treatment is recommended